Would you try to hide concussion symptoms to keep playing?

"Yes. If I don't play, I feel like I'm letting my team down. I'm not going to put myself at serious risk. But if I can play through it, I'm going to play through it." — Jaguars WR Cecil Shorts

"Probably. If it's not something that scares me right away and I think it just comes with playing, I'd keep playing. If it's something where I'm woozy, I'm not playing. I've played long enough. I know my body. I know what's serious." — Colts CB Jerraud Powers

"Yes. You want to win. We know what we signed up for in this game. I'd only do it for a mild concussion. You can't hide a bad concussion." — AFC defensive player

"It depends on the severity of the concussion, I guess. It also depends on the situation in the game. I am not coming out of the Super Bowl for a concussion, I know that. I don't think I would come out of a playoff game with a concussion, either. It depends on the severity of the concussion, too. If it is something light, and you know where you are and aware and stuff like that after a couple of minutes, I would probably try and keep going." — Titans DE Kamerion Wimbley

"No. That's a dangerous game to play. Now we're talking about affecting the quality of life decades down the road, as if it's not already going to be affected by the game we play. It's going to put you in a bad situation that can end your career pretty fast." — Jaguars G Uche Nwaneri

"No. I've seen too many concussions and what they can do, and I'd never try to hide the symptoms. I've seen the long-term ramifications, and it's scary. With the knowledge, information and treatment we have now, you'd be crazy to try to hide symptoms." — AFC offensive player

"Before all the new info ... yes. Not worth it now. So no." — Redskins LB Lorenzo Alexander

"It depends on the severity because everyone's tried to hide concussion symptoms. But I'd say no." — AFC offensive player